The church and the nearby buildings at Barnby Dun are quite attractive, but that isn't the case for the rest of the village - it's not particularly unattractive, there's just a lot of bland new housing.
I left the village by walking over the lift bridge over the canal and took the road which leads to Thorpe in Balne, passing over the river and a level crossing, and walking by the derelict site of the recently demolished Thorpe Marsh Power Station.
I didn't reach my first footpath until I had passed through Thorpe in Balne; there was far too much roadwalking for my liking today. This path went down a pleasant wooded track and then straight across a field, directly under an electricity pylon to meet the East Coast Mainline railway line, where there was a pedestrian crossing.
My map is a few years old and doesn't show the new North Doncaster Chord railway line. So...I wasn't sure if there would be a crossing - well there was, but it was a few hundred yards to the north at Haywood Junction where the chord joins the Askern Branch Line.
A few minutes later I picked up the original course of the footpath again just before reaching Owston Grange.
For some reason the next section of my walk was along a slightly overgrown concrete roadway through Owston Wood which is now used by the TransPennine Trail; I was studying the landscape as I was walking and have just had a more detailed look at the map but I can't work out why this should be - maybe at one time it was a private road leading to the grange.
I crossed over the same railway that I encountered earlier, just after leaving Barnby Dun, and then passed through a short tunnel under an abandoned railway line. There are a lot of railway lines in this area...it can get very confusing working out which is which.
I then needed to walk along a rather muddy and overgrown path until I reached my next crossing, over the east Coast Coast Mainline again, at a location called Masserella's Crossing. I needed to get permission from the signalman first though - I just opened the steel box and picked up the phone.
The approach to Thorpe Marsh Nature Reserve from the west is lovely; lowland pasture and mature woodland. It's not as attractive as you approach the road at Norwood Gate though.
I got drenched by a heavy shower as I walked down the road and then across the fields to Almholme, before re-joining the road to Arksey where I'd got plenty of time to take some photographs and pop in to the Old School Tearooms for a pot of tea and an apple crumble pie with ice cream. It's a lovely spot and the price was very reasonable. I was confused though by the combined teapot and cup, less so by the combination fork, spoon, and knife which I ate my dessert with.
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